1. Ali Khademhosseini is an Iranian-born Canadian-American engineer and entrepreneur.

1. Ali Khademhosseini is an Iranian-born Canadian-American engineer and entrepreneur.
Ali Khademhosseini is currently the CEO and Director of the Terasaki Institute for Biomedical Innovation in Los Angeles, California.
Ali Khademhosseini has published approximately 1,000 scientific articles, which have collectively been cited over 145,000 times.
Ali Khademhosseini has contributed to the development of commercial products in the biomedical space, including surgical sealants, wearable sensors, and embolic materials.
Ali Khademhosseini's family migrated to Canada in 1987 and he grew up in Toronto, Canada.
Ali Khademhosseini was first introduced to bioengineering by working as an undergraduate researcher in the laboratory of Michael Sefton who is a professor at University of Toronto.
Ali Khademhosseini has contributed to the development of personalized biomedical technologies using micro- and nanoscale platforms for applications in organ failure, cardiovascular disease, and oncology.
Ali Khademhosseini played a key role in advancing the use of gelatin methacryloyl -based biomaterials in tissue engineering and clinical applications, including surgical sealants and hemostatic agents.
Ali Khademhosseini's team developed conductive and tunable hydrogels by incorporating nanomaterials such as gold nanoparticles and carbon-based compounds into GelMA formulations.
Ali Khademhosseini has contributed to the development of multi-organ-on-a-chip platforms with integrated in-line sensors for real-time monitoring.
Ali Khademhosseini has contributed to the design of hydrogel-based surgical materials, including bioadhesives and tissue sealants.
Ali Khademhosseini is an academic entrepreneur who has started companies to translate the findings of his research into products.
Ali Khademhosseini co-founded Obsidio Medical to use a hydrogel made out of silicate nanoparticles with gelatin to engineer shear-thinning materials for the embolization of blood vessels in the peripheral vasculature.
Ali Khademhosseini was on sabbatical in 2011 as a Harrington fellow at the University of Texas-Austin with Prof.
Ali Khademhosseini was affiliated with Tohoku University, WPI - AIMR program in Sendai, Japan.
Ali Khademhosseini is a recipient of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Outstanding Undergraduate mentor award.
Ali Khademhosseini is a recipient of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Outstanding Undergraduate mentor award.
Ali Khademhosseini has received the American Chemical Society's Viktor K Lamer award, the Unilever award, and has been recognized by major governmental Awards including the and the Office of Naval Research Young Investigator award.